dbus/dbus-1.20.8-CVE-2022-42012.patch

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From 51a5bbf9074855b0f4a353ed309938b196c13525 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Date: Fri, 30 Sep 2022 13:46:31 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] dbus-marshal-byteswap: Byte-swap Unix fd indexes if needed
When a D-Bus message includes attached file descriptors, the body of the
message contains unsigned 32-bit indexes pointing into an out-of-band
array of file descriptors. Some D-Bus APIs like GLib's GDBus refer to
these indexes as "handles" for the associated fds (not to be confused
with a Windows HANDLE, which is a kernel object).
The assertion message removed by this commit is arguably correct up to
a point: fd-passing is only reasonable on a local machine, and no known
operating system allows processes of differing endianness even on a
multi-endian ARM or PowerPC CPU, so it makes little sense for the sender
to specify a byte-order that differs from the byte-order of the recipient.
However, this doesn't account for the fact that a malicious sender
doesn't have to restrict itself to only doing things that make sense.
On a system with untrusted local users, a message sender could crash
the system dbus-daemon (a denial of service) by sending a message in
the opposite endianness that contains handles to file descriptors.
Before this commit, if assertions are enabled, attempting to byteswap
a fd index would cleanly crash the message recipient with an assertion
failure. If assertions are disabled, attempting to byteswap a fd index
would silently do nothing without advancing the pointer p, causing the
message's type and the pointer into its contents to go out of sync, which
can result in a subsequent crash (the crash demonstrated by fuzzing was
a use-after-free, but other failure modes might be possible).
In principle we could resolve this by rejecting wrong-endianness messages
from a local sender, but it's actually simpler and less code to treat
wrong-endianness messages as valid and byteswap them.
Thanks: Evgeny Vereshchagin
Fixes: ba7daa60 "unix-fd: add basic marshalling code for unix fds"
Resolves: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/dbus/dbus/-/issues/417
Resolves: CVE-2022-42012
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
(cherry picked from commit 236f16e444e88a984cf12b09225e0f8efa6c5b44)
(cherry picked from commit 3fb065b0752db1e298e4ada52cf4adc414f5e946)
---
dbus/dbus-marshal-byteswap.c | 6 +-----
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 5 deletions(-)
diff --git a/dbus/dbus-marshal-byteswap.c b/dbus/dbus-marshal-byteswap.c
index 27695aafb..7104e9c63 100644
--- a/dbus/dbus-marshal-byteswap.c
+++ b/dbus/dbus-marshal-byteswap.c
@@ -61,6 +61,7 @@ byteswap_body_helper (DBusTypeReader *reader,
case DBUS_TYPE_BOOLEAN:
case DBUS_TYPE_INT32:
case DBUS_TYPE_UINT32:
+ case DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD:
{
p = _DBUS_ALIGN_ADDRESS (p, 4);
*((dbus_uint32_t*)p) = DBUS_UINT32_SWAP_LE_BE (*((dbus_uint32_t*)p));
@@ -188,11 +189,6 @@ byteswap_body_helper (DBusTypeReader *reader,
}
break;
- case DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD:
- /* fds can only be passed on a local machine, so byte order must always match */
- _dbus_assert_not_reached("attempted to byteswap unix fds which makes no sense");
- break;
-
default:
_dbus_assert_not_reached ("invalid typecode in supposedly-validated signature");
break;
--
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